Ever wonder how they ever made Star Wars, Empire Strikes Back, and Return of the Jedi? Well this documentary explains it all as we're taken on a behind-the-scenes tour of the making of the ... See full summary »

The entire process of making Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999) are shown here in this documentary. From pre-production through post-production we get to see visual effects ... See full summary »

For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones (2002), there were to be many more visual effects than in Star Wars: Episode I - The Phantom Menace (1999). This documentary shows many VFX ... See full summary »

This feature-length documentary, made especially for the 2003 Aliens (1986) DVD release, is incredibly informative with all its interviews with both the cast and crew, as well as behind the... See full summary »

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Having just read the wonderful JW Rinzler book on the making of Empire (which is just about, along with the books on the other two films in the trilogy, incredibly comprehensive), I thought I'd check out what was done at the time to show audiences what went into 'making' all of this. It turns out to only be focused on the special effects, but perhaps that's enough. You get to see how the ILM creators made so many of the innovative moments - how the Hoth battle was staged with a combination of mattes, puppets, stop-motion animation (Good God Tippet and Muren did incredible work), the sound effects and how they originated (Ben Burtt is one of the only ones to be interviewed here), and the other animations and techniques used like optical printing and blue-screen work - and that's it. Oh, not really, there's also some clips from movies kids made around or before that time showing off how influential Star Wars but also fantasy films in general were (I'd love to get a copy of Hardware Wars).

Though not as comprehensive as I might like, I did enjoy the variety of going between the fan's works and the details of the production, even if it's less interview-dependent than most other docs I watch (in that way critic Richard Shickel's narration is closer to older docs, with Hamil narrating). Worth checking out, but if you know some of the details already then it may not teach you anything new; if nothing else to see the likes of the great VFX director Richard Edlund getting things painstakingly ready for shots often only lasting a second of film (or less), and some terrific clips from work by Willis O'Brien, Kubrick and Harryhausen to emphasize the work laid by previous artists.

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